On 10/14/2008 04:24 PM, Madhusudan Singh wrote:


On Tue, Oct 14, 2008 at 12:12 PM, Jeffrey Altman <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:

    Madhusudan Singh wrote:
     >         :$ cd /afs/YYY.edu/users/X/Y/Z/XYZABC
     >         bash: cd: /afs/YYY.edu/users/X/Y/Z/XYZABC: Permission denied
     >
     >     This look like the user you authenticate as, simply doesn't
    have the
     >     required permissions to access the directory.
     >
     >
     > Impossible. I can ssh into the server with the same username and
     > password without any issues.

    Does your local client have a token for the XYZABC user?


I was dearly hoping to avoid such questions by mentioning this rather prominently (along with o/p's of tokens and klist) in my initial post on the thread. Please refer to that.

Patience, friend. We're only trying to help. Do you want your problem fixed or what? Jeffrey's a busy guy; whether he'll have the time to refer back to old messages is not to be taken for granted.

I'm not such a busy guy, so I did refer to your initial post. It contains much detail that many initial reports/requests for help often lack. However, crucial information is also obviously obfuscated. You're clearly aware of many issues that could be related to the problem, and no doubt you've taken great care in providing relevant info while covering your privacy issues. However, given that you don't know what's causing the problem, it's possible that the key piece of missing info was destroyed in the obfuscation process. (Granted, I didn't see any likely candidates while reviewing your initial post again.)

So, I have no solution to offer, no theory to explain the phenomenon you're seeing. But I will offer this advice: When people are offering to help, and ask a simple question, it may well be worth the time for you, a single individual, to repeat the relevant test and provide the new output rather than expecting N-1 list subscribers to go back and review your initial post. What you've described can be explained exactly by having the wrong tokens (which is what I'm betting on still, even having reviewed you i/p). Double checking never hurts.

[Almost relevant aside: This afternoon, my reasonably intelligent neighbor asked me to come over and see if I could coax her new monitor into working again. She'd tried everything. Turns out both ends of the power cable have to be firmly plugged in. When you finally crack this problem, you're likely to find it's something like that.]

I'll stop preaching and ask the only other thing that comes to mind. Is your home volume on a different server from the volumes above it? If so, how far off are the clocks on the parent server, your home volume server, and your client? (Probably not relevant, maybe not even a possible source of the problem, but if it's not wrong tokens, you gotta look elsewhere...)
--
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